51,216 research outputs found
Two Compact Incremental Prime Sieves
A prime sieve is an algorithm that finds the primes up to a bound . We say
that a prime sieve is incremental, if it can quickly determine if is
prime after having found all primes up to . We say a sieve is compact if it
uses roughly space or less. In this paper we present two new
results:
(1) We describe the rolling sieve, a practical, incremental prime sieve that
takes time and bits of space, and
(2) We show how to modify the sieve of Atkin and Bernstein (2004) to obtain a
sieve that is simultaneously sublinear, compact, and incremental.
The second result solves an open problem given by Paul Pritchard in 1994
Sieving for pseudosquares and pseudocubes in parallel using doubly-focused enumeration and wheel datastructures
We extend the known tables of pseudosquares and pseudocubes, discuss the
implications of these new data on the conjectured distribution of pseudosquares
and pseudocubes, and present the details of the algorithm used to do this work.
Our algorithm is based on the space-saving wheel data structure combined with
doubly-focused enumeration, run in parallel on a cluster supercomputer
University Scholar Series: Jonathan Roth
Roman Warfare
On April 13, 2011 Jonathan Roth spoke in the University Scholar Series hosted by Provost Gerry Selter at the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Library. Jonathan Roth is a Professor in the History Department at SJSU. In this seminar, he examines the evolution of Roman war over its thousand-year history. He highlights the changing arms and equipment of the soldiers, unit organization and command structure, and the wars and battles of each era.https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/uss/1008/thumbnail.jp
Sampling arbitrary photon-added or photon-subtracted squeezed states is in the same complexity class as boson sampling
Boson sampling is a simple model for non-universal linear optics quantum
computing using far fewer physical resources than universal schemes. An input
state comprising vacuum and single photon states is fed through a Haar-random
linear optics network and sampled at the output using coincidence
photodetection. This problem is strongly believed to be classically hard to
simulate. We show that an analogous procedure implements the same problem,
using photon-added or -subtracted squeezed vacuum states (with arbitrary
squeezing), where sampling at the output is performed via parity measurements.
The equivalence is exact and independent of the squeezing parameter, and hence
provides an entire class of new quantum states of light in the same complexity
class as boson sampling.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Boson sampling with displaced single-photon Fock states versus single-photon-added coherent states---The quantum-classical divide and computational-complexity transitions in linear optics
Boson sampling is a specific quantum computation, which is likely hard to
implement efficiently on a classical computer. The task is to sample the output
photon number distribution of a linear optical interferometric network, which
is fed with single-photon Fock state inputs. A question that has been asked is
if the sampling problems associated with any other input quantum states of
light (other than the Fock states) to a linear optical network and suitable
output detection strategies are also of similar computational complexity as
boson sampling. We consider the states that differ from the Fock states by a
displacement operation, namely the displaced Fock states and the photon-added
coherent states. It is easy to show that the sampling problem associated with
displaced single-photon Fock states and a displaced photon number detection
scheme is in the same complexity class as boson sampling for all values of
displacement. On the other hand, we show that the sampling problem associated
with single-photon-added coherent states and the same displaced photon number
detection scheme demonstrates a computational complexity transition. It
transitions from being just as hard as boson sampling when the input coherent
amplitudes are sufficiently small, to a classically simulatable problem in the
limit of large coherent amplitudes.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures; published versio
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